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    october's best art

    10 eye-catching October exhibitions, events, and markets for the Houston art lover

    Tarra Gaines
    Oct 8, 2019 | 9:32 am

    Across the nation, fall means fair time. But in Houston, where we always do things in our unique style, October brings a veritable art harvest in the form of fairs, markets, and festivals. Whether you’re looking to begin your holiday shopping for crafty gifts a bit early or are a serious collector of contemporary art, this month brings the perfect art-buying opportunity.

    And for those who want to a visual Halloween treat, a few museum and gallery exhibitions showcase everything from Monet to LEGO sculptures.

    So, mark your calendars for an October filled with some of the coolest fair-weather art.

    Art markets and festivals

    Texas Contemporary at George R. Brown Convention Center (October 10-13)
    For art collectors, mid-October presents one of the most important weekends of the year. Texas Contemporary brings 75 national and international renowned exhibitors to town to give Houston a chance to explore in one place the best up-and-coming and already-arrived contemporary artists. Look for a VIP opening night party, intriguing installations throughout the Convention Center venue, panel discussions, and informative programming on topics ranging from artistic activism to Houston postmodernism.

    stARTup Art Fair at Hotel Icon (October 11 - October 13)
    A new art market comes to town for one of Houston’s biggest art buying weekends, bringing a unique way of connecting artists to art-admirers/buyers. Look for a full transformation of the third and fourth floors of the Hotel Icon into what the fair representatives are calling “an immersive, contemporary art experience through the exhibition of artwork by a diverse group of independent artists, local art nonprofits, artist performances, installations and panel discussions.”

    Bayou City Art Festival Downtown (October 12-13)
    Nearing its 50-year anniversary, the Art Colony Association event has become an art tradition for many Houstonians. Spend the day or weekend downtown strolling the art-filled streets and view the work of 300 artists from around the world, representing 19 different disciplines. Look for food venders throughout the festival as well as live entertainment in the City Hall tent, roaming performers, and a children’s creative zone.

    Art @ Discovery Green (October 25)
    Art buying season is still not over, as the night belongs to this annual juried art festival featuring over 70 artists selling their fine arts and crafts. Recently named one of the Great Public Spaces in America, the whole park joins in this celebration of independent artists with a demonstrations stage and cultural performances on Avenida de las Americas.

    Exhibition and installation openings

    "The Art of Brick" at the Houston Museum of Natural Science (October 7-March 29, 2020)
    For a bit of art and fun for all ages, head to the HMNS for the world’s largest display of LEGO art and sculptures by contemporary artist Nathan Sawaya. It’s probably the only exhibition where you’ll see recreations of Michelangelo’s David, Van Gogh’s Starry Night, and Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa alongside a 20-foot Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton (comprised of over 80,000 LEGO bricks).

    Houston Sculpture Month, citywide (October 12-November 30)
    Houston goes 3D with its annual focus on sculpture in venues and public spaces throughout the city. Look for the opening show at SITE Gallery (with the theme "Outta Space"), which is housed in the re-purposed physical structure of the old Success Rice Silos. Also look for eclectic venues like The Hangar at the 1940 Air Terminal Museum and the entry rotunda of City Hall, as well as galleries throughout the city.

    "Monet to Picasso: A Very Private Collection" at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (October 20-January 12, 2020)
    The MFAH gives us two things we love in one exhibition: Impressionism and a good mystery. We don’t know who the collector is, but we do know MFAH director Gary Tinterow will curate and the MFAH will be the only venue for this exhibition presenting over 30 major paintings from the Impressionist, Post-Impressionist, and 20th-century abstraction periods. Look for Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley, Mary Cassatt, Vincent van Gogh, Paul Gaugin, Paul Cézanne, Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Georges Braque, Juan Gris, and Fernand Léger.

    "Berthe Morisot: Impressionist Original" at the MFAH (October 20-January 12, 2020)
    This companion show to "Monet to Picasso" focuses on the work of the revolutionary female Impressionist especially known for depicting women’s lives with intimate glimpses their private spheres. This new exhibition will showcase her figure paintings and portraits with Impressionistic depictions of faces that perhaps reveal the inner lives beneath the surface.

    "Riding the Tiger: The Art of Bert Long, Jr." at Houston Museum of African American Culture (October 24-November 9)
    HMAAC partners with Deborah Colton Gallery for this exhibition of the acclaimed late artist's work. A mostly self-taught painter, sculptor, and photographer, Long’s work can be found in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Dallas Art Museum, and the MFAH. HMAAC established its Bert Long, Jr. Gallery in 2015, and since has showcased the work of more than 20 emerging artists there.

    "Jacqueline Nova: Creación da la Tierra" at Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston (October 19-January 4)
    Contemporary art isn’t only about the eyes, as the pioneering figure of electroacoustic music in Colombia, and one of Latin America's most important avant-garde and experimental musicians of the 20th century teaches us. "Creación da la Tierra" is the first installation of the late Colombian composer's soundscape work presented in a United States art museum. In this immersive sound installation, the late composer explores the boundaries between music and noise, and between the oral and the aural.

    See your favorite art and dinosaurs in LEGO form at the "Art of Brick" exhibition at the Houston Museum of Natural Science, begining in October 7.

    Perot Museum Art of the Brick, Starry Night
      
    Photo courtesy of Perot Museum
    See your favorite art and dinosaurs in LEGO form at the "Art of Brick" exhibition at the Houston Museum of Natural Science, begining in October 7.
    galleriesmuseums
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    See these shows

    World premieres and a modern Hamlet headline Houston's 12 best new theater shows

    Tarra Gaines
    May 2, 2025 | 2:02 pm
    Open Dance Project presents Panopticon
    Photo by Lynn Lane
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    May is set to thrill Houston audiences, as some theater companies end their 2024-25 seasons with their biggest shows of the season. Look for new spins on classics, plus some dramatic and lavish world premieres. From danced dystopias to Jack the Ripper, the hottest romances to convenient comedy, cake and coffee with friends to tiki bar mai tais with friends, we’ve got the most delicious shows to savior this spring.

    Panopticon from Open Dance Project (May 2-10)
    For their 10th anniversary season, Houston’s source for truly innovative immersive dance is revisiting some of their most provocative shows that invite audiences to walk through danced worlds. First up, Panopticon sets audiences into a futuristic dystopian society where everything is regimented and monitored, even joy and sexual attraction. The audience takes on the role of visitors from the outside “Savage” lands, a place that still offers moments of privacy and spontaneous human emotions. During our tour of Panopticon, we walk amidst the moderated, regulated citizens to view their daily lives. Perhaps we’ll discover two would-be lovers struggling with their desire for physical and emotional intimacy in a world where deep, human connection is forbidden. Open Dance Project once again offers dance storytelling at its most intimate.

    Denise Fennell’s Lessons Learned at Stages (May 2-11)
    In addition to their fun, eclectic mix of comedy, drama, and musicals, for their 2024-25 season Stages brought in comedy fav Denise Fennell for an add-on season of four Late Nite Catechism shows. Now that she’s dispensed sisterly schooling for summer, Halloween, Christmasm and wedding season, this one-woman-show phenomenon takes off her habit to teach us some real life lessons she’s learned as an artist, performer, and writer. Drawing from personal experiences and observations, Fennell weaves together hilarious tales of everyday life, showcasing her talent for finding humor in the ordinary.

    Hamlet from 4th Wall Theatre (May 2-24)
    You’ve never seen Shakespeare’s masterpiece done this way before. Using a directorial vision first conceived by the innovative New York theater company Bedlam, this stripped down and raw Hamlet calls for a cast of only four actors. Wesley Whitson tackles the role of the conflicted Prince Hamlet with Christy Watkins, Philip Hays, and 4th Wall co-founder Philip Lehl jumping in and out of around 30 roles between them, including furniture. The other 4th Wall co-founder, Kim Tobin-Lehl, directs this greatest of tragedies.

    Primary Trust at Alley Theatre (May 2-25)
    This recent Pulitzer Prize-winning show by Eboni Booth is making its Houston debut. The play explores the inner and outer lives of Kenneth, a lonely 38-year-old man who works in a bookstore in a small New York town. His one after-work joy is sipping on mai tais at the local tiki bar with his friend Bert. But after being laid off from his long-time job, he is forced to make changes in his life of comfortable routine. This tender comedy cherishes the intimate moments in any life where every choice matters and every connection holds the power to create change.

    Coconut Cake at Ensemble Theatre (May 9-June 1)
    Ensemble partners with several prestigious theaters across the U.S. to produce this new play by acclaimed playwright Melda Beaty as a “rolling” world premiere. The show has already won awards for giving authentic voice to a group of retired Black men who meet every week for coffee at a local restaurant. The dramatic and comic play gives audiences a seat at the table to listen in as these men talk about their wives, families, and the latest neighborhood gossip. But when a mystery woman moves into the abandoned house down the street, with her Creole wiles, tempting coconut cake, and medicine cabinet secrets, the men find their daily talks and perhaps quiet, retired lives might change forever.

    Bug from Dirt Dogs (May 16-31)
    Having treated Houston audiences to a standout production of the Tracy Letts contemporary classic August: Osage County two years ago, Dirt Dogs goes back to the Letts well for this devastating earlier work that explores the darkness in the human mind. Bug's exploration of conspiracy theories and paranoia might seems just as timely today as it did in the late 90s. A lonely waitress and veteran drifter find unexpected love as they meet regularly in a seedy Oklahoma City motel room. But as their affair continues, mysterious bugs begin to take over their space. Are they simple pests or could they be the result of military experiments? The couple’s fears soon over take them and disrupt any attempt at normalcy.

    Kim’s Convenience at Main Street Theater (May 17-June 15)
    The international hit Canadian television and Netflix comedy began as an Ins Choi play about the Kims, a Korean-Canadian family running a neighborhood convenience store in Toronto. While contending with new luxury buildings going up around the convenience store and a Walmart preparing to move in, the Kims also must manage their traditional expectations for their children. Their daughter and son are very much a product of their modern, Canadian upbringing.

    Meanwhile, when Mr. Kim receives an unexpected offer for his property, he has a difficult decision to make. Should he take the money and give in to developers or convince his daughter to follow in his footsteps and run the family business? This Main Street production is the first time Houston will get a chance to see the original stage play that started the Kim’s Convenience streaming sensation and changed some of the rules of situation comedies.

    In the Heights from Theatre Under the Stars (May 20-June 1)
    With music and lyrics by Hamilton author Lin-Manuel Miranda and book by Quiara Algeria Hudes, In the Heights is set over three days in the Washington Heights neighborhood in NYC. Narrated by bodega owner Usnavi, the show follows the daily struggles and celebrations of the people in Usnavi’s neighborhood, as some of them question what home means to them. During these few days, there’s news of a winning lottery ticket and then an electrical blackout ends up shedding new light on family and romantic relationships. The show touches on issues of immigration, assimilation, gentrification, and even the high price of college education, making Heights just as relevant as when it debuted on Broadway in 2008. Yet, it’s the rich lives and songs of the characters that will bring the TUTS 2024-25 season to close on such a joyful note.

    Private Lives at Alley Theatre (May 23-June 15)
    Though first staged in 1930, the reason that this Noël Coward classic comedy has withstood the test of time is that the show’s witty, central couple became a model for almost a century of sexy, bickering lovers to appear on stage and screen afterwards. To keep it fresh, the Alley gives Private Lives a tango spin, moving the sophisticated comedy from Europe to South America. When divorced couple Elyot and Amanda accidentally find themselves honeymooning with their new spouses in adjacent rooms, sparks fly and tempers flare in a whirlwind of passion and humor. The Alley brings back acclaimed director KJ Sanchez to add that spicy twist to the relationships, transporting audiences to 1930s Argentina and Uruguay.

    Toros at Rec Room (May 24-June 14)
    After giving Houston audiences an original and reinvigorated take on the American classic Death of a Salesman last month, Rec Room gets contemporary with this play about a trio of aimless twenty-somethings. Toro is back in Madrid hanging out with his high school friends, Juan and Andrea (and Juan’s dying golden retriever, Tica). They spend their weekends exactly like they used to: chain-smoking pitis in Juan’s garage, listening to Juan’s latest DJ mix, and going out to clubs around Madrid. As sexual tensions emerge and old power dynamics get challenged, these third-culture-kids struggle to grow up, take responsibility, and find a version of reality to believe in. This is a Rec production so look for a surreal twist to all this Gen Z angst, perhaps in the role that veteran Houston actor Greg Dean is playing.

    Raymonda from Houston Ballet (May 29-June 8)
    Dance lovers have certainly been anticipating this show ever since HB announced artistic director Stanton Welch would be creating a world premiere new vision for this most traditional classical ballet. The original late 19th century storybook ballet, choreographed by Marius Petipa to the music of Russian composer Alexander Glazunov, is rarely staged in its entirely, lacking some of the drama that modern audiences crave. Though inspired by Petipa, Welch has moved the original story set in the Middle Ages to a more fairytale realm.

    In Welch’s version, the lovely young Raymonda and her sisters are destined to be betrothed to dukes from various countries. But Raymonda's heart already belongs to another. An evil plot by the queen’s trusted advisor may change the destiny of Raymonda and her one true love. Along with HB’s world class dancers, look for lavish sets and costumes by acclaimed Italian designer Roberta Guidi di Bagno. Raymonda is sure to become a treasured classic amongst Houston Ballet’s illustrious repertoire.

    Let. Her. Rip. at Stages (May 30-June 22)
    When Stages announced their 2024-25 season, they left the final pick to the incoming artistic director, Derek Charles Livingston, who has chosen this world premiere thriller play by Maggie Lou Rader. It’s a work he helped to develop in his previous position as the director of new plays at the Utah Shakespeare Festival.

    Houston will be the very first to see the first full production of this intriguing tale of camaraderie, activism, and ferocity which lies in the crosshairs of London’s Match Women labor movement and the Jack the Ripper murders of 1888. Labor leaders Em, Liza, and Nana are endeavoring to make the East End safer for women and all working people when the headlines move away from their accomplishments to the man murdering women of their community. They must reignite their fight against deadly misogyny, police brutality, and their own personal demons. But as tensions come to a head, who will make the final rip?

    Open Dance Project presents Panopticon
      
    Photo by Lynn Lane
    Open Dance Project presents Panopticon
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